Nwanza

1.2K posts

Nwanza

Nwanza

@kcdikem

gratitude, grace, growth💫

Katılım Kasım 2021
195 Takip Edilen116 Takipçiler
Nwanza
Nwanza@kcdikem·
@DavidHundeyin Pre-2015 political space in Nigeria was like a euphoric, drug-induced mass psychosis engineered to derail the country, with many willing participants still not sure who the dealer truly is till today.
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Onyeka ☭
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin·
Same reason why Michelle Obama and Diddy oni ororo were carrying BringBackOurGirls placards. I'll spell it out further: Goodluck Ebele Jonathan was the victim of a well organized regime change operation by the US state department. They, alongside their local puppets like the Agbado man, the Orange beret man and your favorite mathematician turned daddy GO.... successfully deceived Nigerians (who collectively have the geopolitical literacy of an agama lizard) into voting out the man whose administration was overseeing one of the fastest growing economies in the world. In his place they put in a retired soldier with the economic savviness of a sugarcane seller. The result was an economic recession within 18 months and the beginning of our misery as a people. Do you understand? The Chibok abduction The bomb blasts The OccupyNigeria protests NONE OF THAT SHIT WAS ORGANIC. NONE. It was well funded by more dollars that is in your state budget. Promoted by media that serves foreign interests. Legitimized by clerics and pastors whose loyalties are directly or indirectly tied to Washington DC and it's Middle Eastern puppet Saudi Arabia. So the reason Nigerians haven't marched on Eagle square to express our rage is because this time, there is no US state department slush fund to organize the masses. In fact, billions of dollars are pumped into Nigeria to ENSURE that it doesn't happen. Doubly so after EndSars which took them by surprise. Since independence the The United States of America and it's allies in Europe have been pouring unfathomable amounts of money and resources into making sure we never have peace. Because a united, rich Nigeria will thoroughly dismantle their operations in Africa. Understand where your problems are coming from. Know who your real enemies are. ... Or you will be fighting smoke. Whenever you wake up is your morning.
Onyeka ☭ tweet media
Abiodun@bin_gbada

276 chibok Girls - 88 people dead in Nyanya Bombing - $1 - 215 - Fuel - 135 naira was enough to say Johnathan had failed & most people wanted his removal. so why is - 416 people in Borno - over 170 kidnapped in Kwara - 162 killed in Kaiama - 177 in Kajuru - fuel - 1,400 - $1 - 1,400 not enough to say BAT has failed & he needs to go??

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
"Loved and believed" based on WHAT? Again, it's been 11 years since 2015 and I think at this point it's finally OK to admit to yourselves that you were the victims of a US information campaign. In your heart of hearts, you know what I'm saying is true, but you're still fighting this pointless psychological civil war of attrition more than a decade later. Stop fighting with the depressing reality that you took leave of all critical thinking and allowed yourselves to be stampeded into disaster by a foreign power. Nobody is going to beat you. Even Buhari himself is dead. E no send your papa anymore. Stop trying to justify what cannot be justified. You were duped. Move on.
The oyinn💕@oyindamolaaa_xx

All of a sudden, everyone has forgotten how much almost the entire nation loved Buhari and believed he was the best.

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IFEANYịCHUKWU!!
IFEANYịCHUKWU!!@OgbajiIfeanyi·
Breaking News!!!! Effective immediately, Gov Soludo has banned the presentation of cows, goats & any expensive items as burial/condolences gifts. The only gifts allowed by are carton beer, crate of mineral & jar of palm wine. All burials will henceforth be on Saturday across Anambra State. Allegedly, 6 months imprisonment & 100k fine for defaulters.
IFEANYịCHUKWU!! tweet media
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Georginho
Georginho@Dentalgiorgio·
They harassed this woman every day. To date, we haven't been able to replace her with anyone on her level.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala@NOIweala

With H.E Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan @takaichi_sanae, UN Secretary General H.E Antonio Guterres @antonioguterres and Deputy UN Secretary General H.E @AminaJMohammed, at the reception hosted by the Prime Minister for participants at the United Nations Chief Executives Board (UNCEB) Meeting in Tokyo. @JPN_PMO

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Fatai Ibrahim, RN,MSN 🇳🇬🇺🇸
It is mind blowing that Jonathan biggest critics are Tinubu biggest supporters. You cannot hate Jonathan and support Tinubu. It’s makes no sense. You are a fvcking hypocrite and a terrible person.
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Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
Students from Singapore will be competing with winners of South East Maths Olympiad in ROME this July for International STEM Olympiad. They are amongst the 154 participating countries. We have been drilling our boys. My task to them is simple, beat Singapore and China and bring our Gold home.
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Pharaoh👳🏾‍♂️👑
All the Celebrities that were very vocal during Goodluck Jonathan’s regime have suddenly lost their voice in this Tinubu’s regime that is 5 times worse than that of GEJ. My question is why???
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Harmless
Harmless@HarmlessHQ·
Omo! If you too dig Adekunle's past tweets, you fit jam your lost relationship. 😂
Harmless tweet mediaHarmless tweet mediaHarmless tweet media
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Malachy Odo II
Malachy Odo II@MalachyOdo1·
A Party that is rigging it's own primaries has no plans of playing by the rules. APC is a disease that we must exterminate.
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Cross˚
Cross˚@Elkrosmediahub·
Voting alone isn’t enough this election. You have to be ready to defend your votes. We saw the counting APC did during their primaries. They have the advantage in the general elections, and knowing they don’t care about your emotions, they’d try to repeat that shameless act.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
I'll also say this as someone who grew up on the nice side of the barbed wire fences and high gates in the very nice part of town where the Nigerian 0.1% live - learn to touch grass and worry about yourself because rich people really do not care about you. Like, at all. The Nigerian rich don't even like each other. They barely tolerate one another and make practical alliances to preserve wealth and influence. And now that the economy is too small to support all the children of the Nigerian 0.1%, nearly everyone I grew up with in the nice, leafy part of town now lives in Toronto or London or wherever. You, Mr N250k/month Union Bank contract staff are not part of rich people's thinking at all. At. All. The rich have no plans for you. They have no plans to create opportunities for you. They have no plans to fix the things they broke on their way to building that N1bn townhouse in Parkview Estate. They have no plans to contribute towards making society better. If Satan came from Hell with a tail and horns growing out of his head and he ran for political office, the rich would all go make deals with him - because in the world of the rich, the only thing that matters is their own interests, and making sure that they never, EVER have to live like you or next to you. So all this simping and vicarious fawning over wealth and fame that you people do everyday is the most redundant thing in the world - the rich have no intention of expanding their circle to let you in, and they have no intention of enabling the conditions for you to create your own independent circle of wealth. The only thing the rich need from you is to be poor and obedient, so that your labour can be cheap, plentiful and replaceable. Statistically as a Nigerian, you will NEVER be rich or close to it. You will NEVER live in Maitama. 99.99% of Nigerians who have existed since 1960 have prayed and fantasised about becoming rich, and 99.99% of those prayers and fantasies never came true. That's just math. You will never be a rich and famous celebrity. You will never be a successful content creator. You will never make millions shilling crypto, trading Forex, sports betting, or whatever the fuck is the latest quick wealth fantasy in town. It's just not going to happen. That being the case, a much more constructive use of your time would be to fight for the material elevation of what you actually have, where you actually have it. Instead of daydreaming about the N300m house in Lekki that 3 generations of your family cannot buy, get involved in a local effort to give your own immediate neighbourhood a facelift, or a political campaign to pressure the state to build high quality social housing. If you hate being harassed without consequence online, instead of vicariously enjoying how a celebrity has used their wealth and influence to jail someone for making a horrid tweet, fight for a judiciary and legal system that is transparent and accessible to all, so that a singer living in the UK on a global talent visa doesn't get to have more access to your Nigerian justice system than you who lives in Nigeria 24/7. Instead of building your mental architecture around the false idea of being a "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" who will someday take your rightful place on Banana Island, touch grass tonight and accept that it will never happen, and what you need to do instead is fight for where you are to become a better, more liveable place that you no longer wish to escape from. Stop cosplaying as rich folk. Stop cooing and fawning over rich folk. Stop daydreaming about someday "blowing up" and buying a house next to Burna Boy. Rich people have no intention of sharing their world with you. Free yourself from the tyranny of living vicariously through people who don't care that you exist. Them no really send any part of your papa at all.
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Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
There’s a silent disaster happening in Nigeria that nobody wants to confront honestly. We keep shouting about unemployment, bad leadership, low productivity, corruption, poor healthcare, failed institutions and why our country is not working. But many people are avoiding the root cause. Our education system has been deeply compromised. A student enters secondary school or university full of dreams, intelligence and potential. Then the system teaches them something dangerous: “You do not need competence to succeed.” WAEC malpractice. NECO malpractice. GCE runs. Sorting. Sex for grades. Extortion. Intimidation. Victimization. Handout rackets. “See me after class.” “Talk to your lecturer.” “Settle this course.” And after 4 or 5 years of surviving that environment, we expect excellence to magically appear. It won’t. A country cannot repeatedly reward dishonesty in classrooms and expect integrity in government offices, hospitals, engineering sites, courtrooms and businesses. This is where many of our unemployable graduates are coming from. Not because Nigerians are not intelligent. Not because our youths are lazy. But because too many people were trained inside a system where merit was murdered. The painful part is this: UNN, UNILAG, FUTO, ABU, UI, IMSU, ABSU and many others are using largely the same NUC-regulated curriculum. The difference is standards. The universities that still command respect are usually the ones with stronger resistance against sorting, extortion and academic fraud. The ones collapsing in reputation are often the ones where corruption became normalized. Once a student realizes they can buy an “A” with ₦20,000, or sleep their way through a course, or manipulate results through connections, the motivation to truly learn starts dying slowly. And when millions of such graduates enter the labor market, the entire country pays the price. That weak engineer may eventually supervise a bridge. That poorly trained nurse may handle a patient. That compromised accountant may manage public funds. That fake first-class graduate may become a lecturer and reproduce the same cycle again. This is no longer just an education problem. It is a national security problem. Countries become great because they protect competence fiercely. Singapore did it. China did it. Germany did it. South Korea did it. You cannot build a first-world country with a third-world attitude towards education integrity. Nigeria does not have a shortage of talent. Nigeria has a shortage of systems that protect excellence. And until we become ruthless about fighting academic corruption, exam malpractice, sorting, sex-for-grades and institutional intimidation, we will continue producing certificates instead of competence. This fight is bigger than schools. It is about the future survival of Nigeria itself.
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